Skip to main content
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Register now to learn Fabric in free live sessions led by the best Microsoft experts. From Apr 16 to May 9, in English and Spanish.

Reply
Drewbysnackz
Regular Visitor

Summarizing Capacity Allocated & Capacity Remaining for a Bookable Resource

Hi all - long time lurker, first time poster, so apologies in advance if this is the incorrect sub:

I am hoping to summarize completed/scheduled event duration data with values from three tables.

table A - Events: Contains running registry of training events.

  • Calculated columns use DATEDIFF to return event duration (event end date/time - event start date/time) in hours and minutes

table B - Trainer Logs

  • Maps the user guid of a bookable resource (in this case, a contact with a "Trainer" designation) to the guid of the event in table A in which that Trainer's time was used

table C - Trainer Capacity

  • Trainer's name, guid, and a hard-coded quarterly hours value (160)

 

The goal is relatively straightforward:
For each unique trainer ID + trainer name in table B/C, summarize:

  • the QTD count of Completed vs. Scheduled events (from table A).
    • Any event with a end date < today = "Completed"; with start date > today =  "Scheduled"
  • the duration in hours tied to those Completed/Scheduled events (table A)
  • the sum of hours completed QTD + hours Scheduled QTD (let's call it "Hours Booked or Completed")

Deducting the "Hours Booked or Completed" value from the hard-coded maximum allowable hours (160) that any one trainer has available in any one quarter should then allow me to arrive at a % of Quarterly Hours Used value, which would prove useful when answering the question of which trainers have the capacity remaining to book them with future events.

 

I contemplated bringing the trainer_id value (table B) into the events table (table A) via LOOKUPVALUE, but was unsure if there was a more elegant solution that virtualized this relationship.

Lastly, it's worth noting that an event can have multiple trainers assigned to it. In these instances, I'd like to avoid counting a single event with duration = 8 hours and >1 trainer assigned as 8 hours consumed by each assigned trainer, such that the duration of the event is split by the number of trainers assigned, i.e.,:

If duration = 8 hours && assigned trainer count = 1, then deduct 8 hours from trainer 1's capacity
If duration = 8 hours && assigned trainer count = 2, then deduct 4 hours from trainer 1's capacity and 4 from trainer 2's capacity
If duration = 8 hours && assigned trainer count = 3, then deduct 2.67 hours from t1, 2.67 hours from t2, 2.67 from t3
...etc.

Link to sample data below. Thanks

sample data

EDIT: Public link




1 REPLY 1
lbendlin
Super User
Super User

ok. what is your question?

Helpful resources

Announcements
Microsoft Fabric Learn Together

Microsoft Fabric Learn Together

Covering the world! 9:00-10:30 AM Sydney, 4:00-5:30 PM CET (Paris/Berlin), 7:00-8:30 PM Mexico City

PBI_APRIL_CAROUSEL1

Power BI Monthly Update - April 2024

Check out the April 2024 Power BI update to learn about new features.

April Fabric Community Update

Fabric Community Update - April 2024

Find out what's new and trending in the Fabric Community.

Top Solution Authors